Indebted
in sentence
318 examples of Indebted in a sentence
A few years ago, Kushner and his father bought the most expensive building in New York City, 666 Fifth Avenue, leaving them enormously
indebted
and unable to finance the mortgage.
With harvest failures, failed crop-insurance schemes that benefited insurers rather than
indebted
farmers, and inadequate attention to irrigation, credit, price-support, and other needed inputs, farmer suicides have risen to record levels.
As these reforms take hold, Indian firms should finally be able to resume spending, and banks will once again be able to lend to the critical but currently
indebted
infrastructure and manufacturing sectors.
If heavily
indebted
countries have to pay heavy risk premiums, their debt becomes unsustainable.
But the last election in the US ushered in a Democratic congressional majority that is
indebted
to trade-fearing unions, thus constraining the pro-trade President Barack Obama.
In fact, while concerns over the eurozone’s survival tend to focus on its
indebted
members, Europe’s monetary union is at risk of losing one of the few members that still enjoys a triple-A credit rating: Finland.
Viewed from creditors’ perspective, the age of cheap finance for the
indebted
countries is over.
And, as heavily
indebted
countries are pushed towards insolvency, nationalist political parties – for example, Finland’s True Finns – have grown stronger, alongside more established counterparts elsewhere in Europe.
Likewise, the eurozone’s heavily
indebted
economies (Greece, Ireland, Italy, Portugal, and Spain) have performed considerably worse than projected, owing to significant spending cuts and tax hikes.
Thus, Peru saw its labor legislation virtually rewritten by United States Congressmen
indebted
to American unions before the US-Peru PTA was concluded.
Lastly, he may want to reassess his signature policy, the Belt and Road Initiative, which is increasingly being criticized as a mechanism for China to export its debt to other
indebted
countries, often through investments in white elephants and other dubious projects.
Yet another is that bond markets are completely distorted, and fiscal consolidation in highly
indebted
countries has been postponed.
In a heavily
indebted
country like Brazil, fiscal consolidation can have an unconventional effect on the exchange rate: to the extent that a smaller deficit assuages fears that the government will try to inflate away its debt burden, the currency strengthens.
Many have also cut support for the unemployed, homeless, or
indebted.
Representatives of overly
indebted
countries, and of countries whose banks are strongly exposed as creditors, argue that haircuts would destabilize the European financial system, generating contagion effects tantamount to a second Lehman Brothers crisis.
Moreover, the eurozone itself is a mini-gold standard, with heavily
indebted
members unable to devalue their currencies, because they have no currencies to devalue.
Then, as now, creditor countries (mainly the US) were demanding that deeply
indebted
countries make good on their debts.
European Central Bank President Mario Draghi has decided to use the ECB’s considerable firepower as a financial backstop for
indebted
eurozone countries.
European households almost everywhere became more indebted, but the impact of this credit expansion on private consumption was fundamentally different in the EU’s core countries, where current-account surpluses grew, and in the periphery, where countries accumulated deficits.
This would lead to greater discipline among the eurozone’s
indebted
countries and save Europe from a debt avalanche that could ultimately drive currently solvent states into bankruptcy and destroy the European integration project.
Despite this wealth, Spain became increasingly indebted, eventually defaulting three times – in 1607, 1627, and 1649 – and heading into sharp geopolitical decline.
It is not surprising that deeply
indebted
European governments are casting about for new social policies at a low fiscal cost.
America is militarily overstretched, politically polarized, and financially
indebted.
Lower oil prices make life easier, not harder, for highly
indebted
households in the US or the eurozone periphery.
This should lead to solid government revenues, which is good news for highly
indebted
governments throughout the industrialized world, but particularly for the eurozone periphery.
It is also heavily indebted, but in domestic currency.
Most of the countries are unbalanced and are
indebted
in a currency (the euro) that they cannot print on demand.
In particular, Germany demands more fiscal belt-tightening from heavily
indebted
Southern European countries, whose unions (and voters) are rejecting further austerity.
Moreover, the short-run effect is lower in highly
indebted
countries, and can even be negative during economic expansions if households and firms, expecting higher taxes to pay for future spending, save, rather than spend, the cash.
If a heavily
indebted
country implemented and exhausted all options for reducing its deficit, it would receive an unlimited and credible bailout from the other countries.
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